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A Debt of Love, A Family's Curse

Chapter 3 

Word Count: 715    |    Released on: 03/07/2025

hat branched off the main highway and disappeared into the woods. The directions Mom had gotten were vague, written on a crumpled napk

the house. It was a small, dilapidated saltbox house that looked like it was slowly being swallowed by the overgrown woods around it. The pa

ver. "Are you sure

. She was beyond doubt now,

e only sound was the buzzing of insects. We walked up the cracked stone

that were a startlingly pale blue. Her gray hair was a wild mess, and she wore a fade

parents and landing on me. I was leaning heavily on my dad, my b

rasp. She turned and walked back into the ho

es of dried herbs, oddly shaped rocks, jars filled with murky liquids, and stacks of yellowed books.

om. Mrs. Albright ignored us, busying her

ommanded, not

d me to a threadbare armchair. I

y wife was told... we were told you might

eyes seemed to look right through me, seeing something deep inside. She took a slow sip fro

she

k," she said, her voice flat.

xchanged a c

you mean?"

. "You moved. You brought the old woman, but you

om g

pale. "How could

ng to a near whisper. "You let it get lost. You left it e

randma' s altar. The crushed box from the garage. We hadn' t told her a single word, but she knew. She knew everything. In that moment, in that dusty, strange-smelling house, the world I knew, the world

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A Debt of Love, A Family's Curse
A Debt of Love, A Family's Curse
“We moved into a new house in August, a fresh start my dad called the American dream. Bigger house, two-car garage-everything seemed perfect, a step up for our family. Then, the shelf in the garage collapsed, crushing Grandma' s precious altar, the one she' d used for protection for years. Soon after, my uncle Bob died in a freak car accident, and then I fell violently ill with a fever no doctor could break. I was lucid enough to hear my parents whisper about something wrong, something unnatural. Lying there, burning up, I heard voices, saw things no one else could, arguing with an invisible presence that seemed to cling to me. Mom desperately sought out a strange old woman, Mrs. Albright, who claimed to understand what was happening. She told us it wasn't me that was sick; it was our new house. She said we had broken an ancient pact, angered a hungry entity by discarding Grandma's altar and a carved wooden box. My pragmatic father, who believed only in logic and reason, was forced to confront the impossible: Mrs. Albright knew everything, details we hadn' t shared, about the altar, the box, and the feeling that something was watching us. How could she know? What ancient bargain had my family made, and why was it now demanding payment? There was no denying it now; the world had shifted, and we were trapped in a nightmare of our own making. "Find the box," she rasped, her unsettling pale eyes fixed on me, "and make an offering, or it will take another one of you."”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10